David Icke - David Icke Talks About The French Protests Aired: 2018-12-19 Duration: 08:37 === French Protests and Macron (06:07) === [00:00:00] Music playing. [00:00:07] Music playing. [00:00:31] So, it's been kicking off in France with these protests where people are wearing these luminous [00:00:39] yellow jackets calling for an end to increases in fuel tax [00:00:49] from Macron who is the closest thing [00:00:59] to a dictator. [00:01:03] France has had for a while, and it's had a few, but this guy is something else. [00:01:08] Former employee of the Rothschilds, of course. [00:01:11] And people have been protesting in numbers all over France, blocking roads and what have you. [00:01:18] And of course, like all ways with these things, the protests start out peacefully, which is all they need to be. [00:01:29] You don't have to be violent. [00:01:31] In fact, it's counterproductive. [00:01:32] What you need is non-cooperation. [00:01:39] You don't have to be violent to stop something functioning. [00:01:44] Stuff to be enough obvious for a start. [00:01:47] But anyway, this stuff had been going on all over France. [00:01:54] The government has had to respond to it, even though Mr. [00:02:00] Arrogant Macron showed no desire to do that until it built up and it built up and built up. [00:02:08] So now we have this story. [00:02:11] France introduces six-month moratorium on fuel tax increases. [00:02:16] French Prime Minister Edouard Philippe has... [00:02:21] He's not French, is he? Has announced a six-month suspension of the fuel tax hike, which triggered massive unrest across the country, saying the measure is aimed at stopping the violence and restoring public order. [00:02:35] Well, yeah, okay. [00:02:38] But what he's really saying is we can't cope and we have no power When the public, in large enough numbers, say we're not having it. [00:02:56] And like I say, there's absolutely no need to be violent. [00:03:00] And what happens, as I was going to say a few minutes ago, with these events is they start out peacefully and then they're infiltrated by agent provocateurs who start the violence to try to discredit the peaceful protesters. [00:03:14] You have other people who just want to be violent, just what they are, who join And do what they only know, which is be violent. [00:03:28] And that to a large extent often discredits the peaceful protesters, which are the vast majority. [00:03:38] But what's been interesting in France, and I'll tell you, this is happening around the world, wherever I go. [00:03:44] Even on where I live, the Isle of Wight, it's starting to happen on local issues now. [00:03:50] People are sick of it. [00:03:51] They're sick of being dictated to by these self-appointed dictators. [00:03:59] Because they are overwhelmingly self-appointed. [00:04:01] I mean, the government's supposed to be elected. [00:04:05] But if you look at the French situation here, Macron was in the government of Hollande, Francois Hollande. [00:04:20] And Hollande got the lowest opinion rating of any French president in history at one point. [00:04:29] And so being connected to Hollande and his party would have been real bad news for Macron. [00:04:36] So what he'd do? Starts a whole new party. [00:04:39] Starts a whole new party and fills it with candidates. [00:04:44] Now, Macron's not done that. [00:04:47] Someone with vast organization and enormous amounts of money has done that. [00:04:53] So they bring this Macron up with this new party and then the person who's got a very good chance of winning, he gets targeted by some scandal and all the media are onto that and he steps down, doesn't go on. [00:05:17] And then you have Marine Le Pen of the populist party, as they call them now. [00:05:29] And she's targeted endlessly, 24-7 by the media and the system in general to demonize her. [00:05:40] And Macron wins. [00:05:45] Now, you can say that that was the public voting for Macron, but you look at the background, it wasn't a straight, fair election. === End of an Era (02:44) === [00:05:59] And people are sick of having these people imposed upon them who then dictate what happens and doesn't happen. [00:06:07] So what I found interesting was even though this election Yellow jacket protest all over France turned into violence. [00:06:20] The opinion polls were saying, well, we don't like the violence, but we absolutely agree with what they're protesting against. [00:06:29] And what happens in the end, something I've been trying to get across decade after decade. [00:06:37] If enough people Will not cooperate with their own enslavement and the imposition of more and more pressure, financial pressure, not least on their lives like with this. [00:06:59] Then they can't do it. [00:07:01] There's not enough of them. [00:07:05] And this is another example and what they've had to do is put a moratorium On the fuel tax. [00:07:12] For six months. [00:07:13] And you know. I was involved in something years ago. [00:07:17] During the days of Margaret Thatcher. [00:07:19] She introduced something called the poll tax. [00:07:21] Which was a deeply unfair tax. [00:07:24] Where people with lots of money. [00:07:25] And people with next to no money. [00:07:27] Had to pay the same amount. [00:07:28] Ludicrous. And what it did. [00:07:32] Was bring together. [00:07:35] The middle class and the working class. [00:07:36] Who were both affected. And. [00:07:41] Enough people refused to pay the tax, filled the courts with people being prosecuted for not paying the tax, that the tax had to be replaced. [00:07:51] And, you know, if only this penny would drop, that is 7.5 billion people in the world, plus now. [00:08:02] And the number of people that are controlling the direction of their world and dictating their lives is a stunningly small number compared to them. [00:08:11] And if we stop cooperating with them and stop being divided and ruled between ourselves, then these power cartels cannot function. [00:08:27] Why does anyone think that divide and rule is a constant, constant recurring theme?